Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Sunday, June 29, 2025

Recognising Haringey’s pioneering black protest leaders

 From Haringey Community Press.

Hannah Francis from the George Padmore Institute on the significance of the Black Parents Movement in Haringey 50 years ago.

The Black Parents Movement protest in 1975 with John La Rose at the front right of the group (credit Julian Stapleton)

The Black Parents Movement protest in 1975 with John La Rose at the front right of the group (credit Julian Stapleton)

This year marks the fiftieth anniversary of the Black Parents Movement (BPM), founded in 1975 following the arrest of an innocent West Indian student in Haringey.

On 17th April 1975, 17-year-old Cliff McDaniel and his two friends, Keith and Chris, all students of the Stationer’s Company’s School in Hornsey, were on their lunch break when they were targeted by police officers. McDaniel was well known to the teaching staff, pupils and parents associated with the George Padmore Supplementary School, founded by Trinidadian activist John La Rose in 1966.

Following this incident, many parents and teachers rallied support for McDaniel and formed the Black Parents Movement. At the same time, a group of pupils and young black people formed their own independent but collaborative organisation called the Black Students Movement (later renamed Black Youth Movement). With the unlawful arrest of McDaniel acting as the catalyst, the aims of the BPM were to advance the interests of black working class, unemployed and young people.

John La Rose was a key founding member with early members including local supplementary school teachers Roxy Harris and Albertina Sylvester, as well as educator and campaigner Gus John. Guyanese publishers and activists Jessica and Eric Huntley, who founded the Ealing Concerned Black Parents and Youth Movement in 1976, were also closely affiliated with the activity of the BPM in its most active period.

Current George Padmore Institute (GPI) chair and BPM member Roxy Harris says of the movement: “The BPM played a leading role in developing strategies and action in Britain for black people to fight back against the racism and discrimination in the schooling system and against police corruption and violence and the complicity of the courts.

“John La Rose’s leadership was inspiring and down to earth. One memory is that however urgent and serious a meeting was, John never objected to the presence of children. Indeed he would take persistent fractiousness by the children present as a sign that we had gone on too long and that it was time for the meeting to end!”

BPM grew out of Haringey’s wider history of black radical activism and led to the formation of the Alliance in 1979, a partnership of the Black Youth Movement, Bradford Black Collective and the Race Today Collective. Key campaigns included the Bookshop Joint Action Committee (BJAC) which was formed to campaign against a string of racist and violent attacks on black and progressive bookshops across the country, as well as international solidarity campaigns such as demonstrating against apartheid in South Africa.

The BPM archive collection at GPI is a comprehensive resource preserving the history of the organisation’s founding, key activities, collaborators and organisational principles. Fifty years on, the GPI is marking the occasion by acknowledging this movement’s contributions to campaigning for the rights of black youths and workers against a racist criminal justice system, building alliances and community organising in Haringey and wider British society.


Monday, June 22, 2015

Events coming up at the Mayday Rooms in London

** Production of Possibilities

Friday June 26th, 12-7pm. Reading Room

Occupation Culture

MayDay Rooms activation with Stevphen Shukaitis, Alan W. Moore and others.

How has squatting contributed to the production of art and culture? During times where the cost of rent and living rises well beyond the ability of cultural workers to support themselves in the metropolis, squatting has played an important role in making possible the continued existence of autonomous art and culture.

Come and join us for this day long event that will seek together to bring materials and experiences of how occupations and squatting have contributed to the production of autonomous culture. From social centres to free schools, temporary galleries to combined studios and living spaces, we invite people to bring along materials from your projects that explore these questions and connections. We will be joined by historian and activist Alan W. Moore, who has been working on setting up and documenting these spaces and practices for almost forty years. We will start with an informal lunch and sharing of food, spending the afternoon working through and discussing materials that are brought and then in the early evening Alan will present his new book on the subject Occupation Culture: Art & Squatting in the City from Below and the recent anthology Making Room: Cultural Production in Occupied Spaces.
http://maydayrooms.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=071d5870fc99278166c35f19e&id=601753061d&e=f1db704b13
•••••••••

Thursday June 23rd, 7-10pm. Canteen
The Cultural Discussion Group (Invite only)

The Cultural Discussion Group has been meeting fortnightly since late 2014. The group developed out of two related convictions. The first is that the last decade of capitalist ‘development’ in London has been aided and abetted at every stage by contemporary art, including by contemporary art that claims for itself some kind of radical social ‘conscience’...
http://maydayrooms.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=071d5870fc99278166c35f19e&id=5ff53292aa&e=f1db704b13

•••••••••
Wednesday July 1st, 6-9pm. Screening Room
Under the Moon (5)

We are planning to spend the session looking through some materials about Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp (1982-2000) - ​join us for an experiment in collective research; to  rummage through the boxes held at May Day Rooms, to read, talk and collate words, images and symbols. The first collective text to emerge from the camp framed the purpose of occupation as both a specific protest against nuclear power, but also as a broader project which aimed to develop the capacity of women to resist...
http://maydayrooms.us5.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=071d5870fc99278166c35f19e&id=6b6c9ad1f5&e=f1db704b13

•••••••••

Thursday 2nd -  Thursday 9th July, 10am - 6pm, MDR Reading Room
Schooling and Culture Residency


Schooling and Culture was a collaboratively produced journal published during the 70s and 80s between a group of radical left educationalists and young working class school students in London. MayDay Rooms currently houses a collection of the journals and this week long programme seeks to further socialise this archive. Since December 2014, convened by Russell Newell, a group of educators/artists/organisers and some of the original contributors have been meeting at MDR to discuss the potential of reactivating the journal, what it would look like 
http://maydayrooms.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=071d5870fc99278166c35f19e&id=198c50fd9a&e=f1db704b13

============================================================

MayDay Rooms
88 Fleet Street
London,  EC4Y 1DH
United Kingdom
Tel: 020 3691 5230

www.maydayrooms.org